Self-guyed structures

ABSTRACT

A series of static structures formed from a plurality of interconnected rigid compression members or struts and flexible tension members or guys (e.g. wire cables, chains or elastic cords). Each strut is in pure compression (i.e. no bending or twisting forces) and each guy is in pure tension. The struts are discontinuous in several embodiments of the invention, intersect at an internal or peripheral point in others, or radiate outwardly from an internal central point in still others. Three or four configurations of guy arrangements are described and claimed for each of the five embodiments of this invention. Self-Guyed Structures (SGS&#39;s) can be utilized as a stand-alone module or modules can be combined by connecting them at any point on a strut or guy in a nested (overlapping) or an adjacently attached configuration to assemble composite SGS&#39;s. Collapsible SGS&#39;s can be made by using a suitable means to disconnect struts from guys and/or a suitable means for elongating selected guys or shortening selected struts. For certain given design parameters, SGS&#39;s can be made more material efficient and lighter than previous similar structures and other conventional structures. Aesthetically pleasing designs for applications where the structure is to be visible can be readily achieved.

CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS

[0001] This is the Utility Patent Application related to Provisional patent application Ser. No. 60/216,298 by Dennis J. Newland.

STATEMENT REGARDING FEDERALLY SPONSORED RESEARCH OR DEVELOPMENT

[0002] Not applicable.

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION

[0003] This invention relates to three dimensional space defining and flexible guyed structures; U.S. CLASS: 52/646, 52/146.148.

[0004] This invention is an improvement of the prior art in that it includes new configurations of compression members or struts and tension members or guys to create new three dimensional free standing static structures having the ability to meet certain given design goals more economically and in more aesthetically pleasing arrangements. This invention also provides guy configurations that can be approximately two thirds the length of those required by the prior art for certain configurations.

[0005] The tensile-integrity (or tensegrity) sphere was introduced by Fuler (1962) in U.S. Pat. No. 3,063,521 as he used multiple modules of one variation of one embodiment of this invention e.g. a 3 discontinuous strut HYPERBOLOID SELF-GUYED STRUCTURE (SGS) with a circumferential configuration of guys to connect the strut ends in the “end-planes”. This invention is an improvement of Fuler's in that it includes two other guy configurations for the 3 discontinuous strut HYPERBOLOID SGS as well as including HYPERBOLOID SGS's of four or more struts, each with three guy configurations and also including strut arrangements which intersect at an internal or a peripheral point as well as the discontinuous configuration.

[0006] The 6 discontinuous strut icosahedron with circumferential guys connecting the strut ends, thus forming the 20 faces of the icosahedron, was illustrated by Kitrick (1980) in U.S. Pat. No. 4,207,715. Kitrick also illustrated the 3 strut octahedron with circumferential guys connecting the strut ends thus forming the eight triangular faces of the octahedron. Two separate variations of one embodiment of this invention would classify Kitrick's icosahedral and octahedral tensile-integrity structures as 6 and 3 discontinuous strut PLANAR SGS's respectively. Gwilliam et al also documented this octahedral arrangement of struts and guys in U.S. Pat. No. 4,711,062 (1987). This invention is an improvement of these previous structures in that it includes three additional guy configurations for these 6 and 3 strut PLANAR SGS's as well as including 4,5 and 7 or more strut configurations, each with three guy configurations and configurations where the strut planes are not necessarily orthogonal and configurations where struts intersect at an internal or a peripheral point as well as the discontinuous configuration. Matan et al in U.S. Pat. No. 5,688,604 (1997) and Jacobs in U.S. Pat. No. 4,449,348 (1984) each devised structures composed of tension and compression members but in each case there was a twisting and/or a bending force on the compression members unlike this invention.

[0007] Prior art has been limited to the configurations described above which have not enjoyed widespread use. This invention provides many additional configurations of the naturally material efficient structural design strategy of limiting structural elements to a purely compressional or a purely tensional load. By judicious choice of materials a wide range of strength, toughness, rigidity and/or flexibility and load response characteristics can be designed into these structures. By judicious combinations of SGS's either with other SGS's or with traditional structures, redundancy and failure tolerant designs can be achieved. Attractive and interesting as well as functional designs for applications where the structure will be visible are also advantages of this invention. These SGS's are pre-stressed and by varying this pre-stress load the designer can achieve differing structural characteristics (e.g. rigidity, resonance damping etc.) with the same structural elements. SGS's can be made collapsible for ease of transportation or storage should collapsibility be a desireable feature of the structure being used.

[0008] Further advantages of this invention will become apparent from a consideration of the drawings and ensuing description.

[0009] U.S. Pat. Documents cited above or related to this invention are;

[0010] 5,688,604 October, 1997 Matan et al 428/542.2

[0011] 4,449,348 May, 1984 Jacobs 52/648

[0012] 4,207,715 June, 1980 Kitrick 52/81

[0013] 4,711,062 December, 1987 Gwilliam et al 52/646

[0014] 3,063,521 November, 1962 Fuller 189-34

BRIEF SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

[0015] This invention is an improvement of the prior art in that it includes new configurations of compression members or struts and tension members or guys to create new static structures having the ability to meet certain given design goals more economically and in more aesthetically pleasing arrangements. This invention provides many additional configurations of the naturally material efficient structural design strategy of limiting structural elements to a purely compressional or a purely tensional load.

[0016] This invention, SELF-GUYED STRUCTURES (SGS's), is a series of three dimensional free standing static structures formed from a plurality of interconnected rigid compression members or struts and flexible tension members or guys (e.g. wire cables, chains or elastic cords). Each strut is in pure compression (i.e. no bending or twisting forces) and each guy is in pure tension. The struts are discontinuous in several variations ond/or combinations of the five different embodiments of this invention, intersect at an internal or peripheral point in others, or radiate outwardly from an internal central point in still others. The five different embodiments (each with multiple variations) of this invention are; 1) HYPERBOLOID SGS's, 2) PLANAR SGS's, 3) HYP-PAR SGS's, 4) RADISL SGS's, and 5) POLYGONAL SGS's.

[0017] Three or four configurations of guy arrangement are claimed for each strut arrangement in each embodiment (with the exception of the three that are part of prior art as described above). The guys can be configured in a 1) circumferential, 2) radial or 3) in an internal arrangement in addition to the obvious 4) linear arrangement.

[0018] By judicious choice of materials a wide range of strength, toughness, rigidity and/or flexibility and load response characteristics can be designed into these structures. By judicious combinations of SGS's either with other SGS's or with traditional structures, redundancy and failure tolerant designs can be achieved. Attractive and interesting as well as functional designs for applications where the structure will be visible are also advantages of this invention. These SGS's are pre-stressed and by varying this pre-stress load the designer can achieve differing structural characteristics (e.g. rigidity, resonance damping etc.) with the same structural elements

[0019] SGS's can be utilized as stand-alone modules or modules can be combined by connecting them at any point on a strut or guy in a nested (overlapping) or an adjacently attached configuration to assemble composite SGS's. SGS's can similarly be combined with traditional structures to form additional composite structures.

[0020] These SGS's can be made collapsible by utilizing a means of disconnecting the guys from the struts and/or utilizing a means to elongate selected guys or shortening selected struts.

DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS

[0021] In the Figures of the drawings struts are labeled as 20 and guys are labeled as 30, 30 a, 30 b, . . . etc.

[0022]FIG. 1A is the 3 discontinuous strut tensile-integrity structure patented by Fuler. The “end-plane” guys (30 a) are configured in a circumferential arrangement e.g. there is a guy on each edge of the top and bottom faces of this structure.

[0023]FIG. 1B is a 6 discontinuous strut tensile-integrity structure patented by Kitrick. Each of the twenty faces of this icosahedral tensile-integrity structure has a circumferential arrangement of guys e.g. one guy (30) along each edge of each of the twenty faces (most readily seen in the upper left region of the figure).

[0024]FIG. 2A is a 3 discontinuous strut HYPERBOLOID SGS with the “end-plane” guys (30 a) configured in a radial arrangement as contrasted to FIG. 1A's circumferential arrangement. This radial arrangement requires only 58% of the length required in the circumferential arrangement of FIG. 1A.

[0025]FIG. 2B is a 3 discontinuous strut HYPERBOLOID SGS with the “end-plane” guys (30 b) configured in an internal arrangement as contrasted to FIG. 1A's circumferential arrangement. This guy configuration allows achievement of certain design goals not possible with the circumferential or radial arrangements.

[0026]FIG. 2C is a 6 discontinuous strut HYPERBOLOID SGS with the “end-plane” guys (30 c) configured in a radial arrangement.

[0027]FIG. 2D is a 12 discontinuous strut composite HYPERBOLOID SGS where the struts are generally configured to form a rough cube with each corner truncated. The guys in each truncated corner (30 d) are configured in a radial arrangement with the radial guy intersection points forming the exact vertices of a cube. Each strut in this composite structure is a member of two 3 discontinuous strut HYPERBOLOID SGS's each of which has an “end-plane” that forms the truncation of a corner of the cube.

[0028]FIG. 3A is a 6 discontinuous strut PLANAR SGS with a radial arrangement of guys (30 e) in only 12 of the 20 faces (all that is required for structural integrity) of the icosahedron as contrasted to the circumferential guy arrangement of FIG. 1B (which requires 30 guys). This radial configuration represents the minimal total length of guy members for the case of the icosahedron with guys on an edge or in the face planes. The radial configuration requires only 60% of the length required with the circumferential arrangement of FIG. 1B.

[0029]FIG. 3B is a 6 discontinuous strut PLANAR SGS with an internal guy arrangement (30 f) which also can be used to reduce the total length of guy members necessary to provide structural integrity to the icosahedron or to achieve other design goals.

[0030]FIG. 4A is a 10 discontinuous strut HYP-PAR SGS with one of the three hyperbolic paraboloid surfaces having six struts and the other two having two each. This structure has a radial arrangement of guys between the edge struts of each of the three hyperbolic paraboloid surfaces (the ends of these edge struts form four “end planes” where the tetrahedron is truncated and the edge struts are also oriented in a HYPERBOLOID configuration with respect to each other) and a linear arrangement of guys between the struts of the single 6 and the two 2 strut hyperbolic parabloid surfaces.

[0031]FIG. 4B is a 20 discontinuous strut HYP-PAR SGS which consists of two 10 strut hyperbolic paraboloid surfaces intersecting each other at a centerline between the fifth and sixth strut of each surface. A linear arrangement of guys between each strut is used which results in two warped loops which also intersect each other at the centerline of the hyperbolic paraboloid surfaces.

[0032]FIG. 5A is an 8 strut RADIAL SGS whose external strut ends form the vertices of a cube and with a circumferential arrangement of guys in each of the six square faces of the cube. The internal strut ends intersect at a central point within the cube (although not necessarily the exact center of the cube).

[0033]FIG. 5B is a 6 strut RADIAL SGS whose external strut ends form the vertices of an octahedron with a circumferential arrangement of guys in each of the eight triangular faces of the octahedron. The internal strut ends intersect at a central point within the octahedron (although not necessarily at the center of the octahedron).

[0034]FIG. 6A is a 4 discontinuous strut POLYGONAL SGS whose outer strut ends form the vertices of a tetrahedron with a circumferential arrangement of guys in each of the 4 triangular faces of the tetrahedron. The inner ends of the struts do not intersect and, combined with the inner guys (arranged in a skewed quadralateral configuration), provide a radially outward force to react the inward force (created by the guys connecting the outer ends of the struts) resulting in structural integrity.

[0035]FIG. 6B is a 8 discontinuous strut POLYGONAL SGS's constructed by the combination of two overlapping 4 discontinuous strut HYPERBOLOID SGS's (with one “end-plane” smaller than the other and with the two smaller “end-planes” overlapping inside the outer cube) whose outer strut ends (from the larger “end-planes”) become the vertices of a cube and whose inner strut ends do not intersect but do also form the vertices of a smaller inner cube rotated with respect to the outer cube. In this combination an additional four guys are added to complete the outer cube which act to increase the overlap of the two 4 discontinuous strut HYPERBOLOID SGS's while an additional four guys are also added to complete the inner cube and they act oppositely (e.g. to reduce the overlap) thus providing the necessary counter forces for structural integrity.

[0036]FIG. 6C is a 6 discontinuous strut POLYGONAL SGS's whose outer strut ends form the vertices of an octahedron with guys configured in a radial arrangement in only 4 of the 8 triangular faces of the octahedron (all that is required for structural integrity). This radial configuration of guys requires only 58% of the length required in the circumferential arrangement. The inner strut ends do not intersect and when combined with inner guys (configured as a twisted prism with radial guys in the “end-planes” of the prism and skewed guys forming the three twisted edges which connect the “end-planes” of the prism) provide the necessary outward counter force to react the inward force (created by the outer strut ends and their guys) resulting in structural integrity.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION

[0037] This invention is a series of three dimensional, free standing static structures titled SELF-GUYED STRUCTURES (SGS's). They are composed of a plurality of compression and tension members. The compression members or struts are in pure compression (i.e. no bending or twisting forces) and the tension members or guys (e.g. wire cables, chains or elastic cords) are in pure tension and have both ends attached to the structure itself, not an external anchor point. The struts are discontinuous in several variations ond/or combinations of the five different embodiments of this invention, intersect at an internal or peripheral point in others, or radiate outwardly from an internal central point in still others. The five embodiments (described in more detail below) of this invention are; 1) HYPERBOLOID SGS's, 2) PLANAR SGS's, 3) HYP-PAR SGS's, 4) RADIAL SGS's, and 5) POLYGONAL SGS's.

[0038] Three configurations of guy arrangement are claimed for each strut arrangement in each embodiment (with the exception of the three that are part of prior art as described above). The guys can be configured in a 1) circumferential, 2) radial or 3) internal arrangement (described in more detail below).

[0039] By judicious choice of materials a wide range of strength, toughness, rigidity and/or flexibility and load response characteristics can be designed into these structures. By judicious combinations of SGS's either with other SGS's or with traditional structures, redundancy and failure tolerant designs can be achieved. Attractive and interesting as well as functional designs for applications where the structure will be visible are also advantages of this invention. These SGS's are pre-stressed and by varying this pre-stress load the designer can achieve differing structural characteristics (e.g. rigidity, resonance damping etc.) with the same structural elements

[0040] SGS's can be utilized as stand-alone modules or modules can be combined by connecting them at any point on a strut or guy in a nested (overlapping) or an adjacently attached configuration to assemble composite SGS's. SGS's can similarly be combined with traditional structures to form additional composite structures.

[0041] These SGS's can be made collapsible by utilizing a means of disconnecting the guys from the struts and/or utilizing a means to elongate selected guys or shortening selected struts.

[0042] Five embodiments as well as multiple variations of each embodiment of these SELF-GUYED STRUCTURES (SGS's) are included in this invention.

[0043] 1) HYPERBOLOID SGS's consist of three or more struts (labeled as 20 in FIGS. 1A, 2A, 2B, 2C and 2D) arranged on the surface of a hyperboloid of revolution of one sheet. The struts are discontinuous in several variations of this embodiment and intersect at an internal or a peripheral point in other variations. The term discontinuous is used to mean the struts do not touch each other in the construction of the SGS and it means they do not intersect each other either internally or on the periphery of the SGS. The vertical guys (labeled as 30 in FIGS. 1A, 2A, 2B, 2C and 2D) also lie on the surface of a separate hyperboloid of revolution of one sheet. These structures are enantiomorphic in that struts and vertical guys can have a left handed or a right handed helicity. The lengths of the struts can be equal or of different length and although the length of each strut must span the mid-plane of the hyperboloid of revolution they need not have equal lengths on either side of the mid-plane. The roughly circular arrangement of strut ends on either side of the mid-plane form what are called “end-planes”. In the simpler variations the strut ends/guy attachment points which define “end-planes” are indeed planes and are parallel to the mid-plane of the hyperboloid of revolution. In other variations the strut ends/guy attachment points need not form a true plane nor do they need to be parallel to the mid-plane. Non-parallel “end-planes” and/or non-equal length struts would allow design options for combinations of structures to exhibit a curvature. However the term “end-planes” will be used to label this part (connected by guys labeled 30 a, 30 b, 30 c or 30 d of FIGS. 1A, 2A, 2B, 2C and 2D) of the HYPERBOLOID SGS. FIGS. 1A, 2A, 2B, 2C and 2D are only four of the many possible variations of the HYPERBOLOID SGS embodiment claimed as a part of this invention. Three guy configurations are claimed for each variation of the HYPERBOLOID SGS's embodiment as described below.

[0044] 2) PLANAR SGS's have a minimum of three struts defining a minimum of three planes (there can also be four or more planes) which intersect as necessary to form a three dimensional structure with integrity. These planes can be, but do not necessarily have to be, orthogonal to each other nor does each strut in a given plane need to be parallel to the other struts in the same plane. These struts are discontinuous in several variations of this embodiment and intersect at an internal or a peripheral point in other variations. FIGS. 3A and 3B are only two of the many variations of the PLANAR SGS embodiment claimed as a part of this invention. Four guy configurations are claimed for each variation of the PLANAR SGS's embodiment as described below.

[0045] 3) HY-PAR SGS's have struts which lie on a hyperbolic paraboloid surface. These SGS's have a minimum of four struts two in each of two hyperbolic parabaloid surfaces which intersect as necessary to form a three dimensional structure with integrity. These surfaces can be, but need not necessarily be, orthogonal to each other. Also there can be more than 2 hyperbolic paraboloid surfaces. The struts are discontinuous in several variations of this embodiment and intersect at an internal or a peripheral point in other variations. FIGS. 4A and 4B are only two of the many variations of the HY-PAR SGS embodiment claimed as a part of this invention. Three guy configurations are claimed for each variation of the HY-PAR SGS's embodiment as described below.

[0046] 4) RADIAL SGS's have four or more struts arranged such that compressive forces are radially vectored from an internal central point. The inward strut ends all connect at this internal central point. The internal central point need not be the exact center of the polygon but must be internal to the polygonal faces whose vertices are defined by the guy connections to the outward ends of the struts. FIGS. 5A and 5B are only two of the many variations of the RADIAL SGS embodiment claimed by this invention. Four guy configurations are claimed for each of these RADIAL SGS's as described below.

[0047] 5) POLYGONAL SGS's have four or more struts arranged in a generally radial (but not precisely radial) configuration. The struts are discontinuous in several variations of this embodiment and intersect at an internal or a peripheral point in other variations. The outward ends of the struts are connected by guys at points which are the vertices of a tetrahedron in FIG. 6A, a cube in FIG. 6B and an octahedron in FIG. 6C. The inner strut ends form a skewed quadralateral in the tetrahedral version (FIG. 6A), a rotated inner cube for the cubic version (FIG. 6B), and a three sided twisted prism for the octahedral version (FIG. 6C) of the illustrated POLYGONAL SGS's and other configurations for other polygons. The outer strut ends are connected by guys such that an inward force is created and the inner strut ends are connected by guys resulting in an outward force which reacts the inward force resulting in structural integrity. FIGS. 6A, 6B, and 6C are only three of the many variations of the POLYGONAL SGS embodiment claimed by this invention. Four inner and four outer guy configurations are claimed for the POLYGONAL SGS's as described below.

[0048] In addition to the obvious linear guy arrangement the three guy configurations (and combinations of these arrangements) which are claimed for each of the above strut configurations are as follows;

[0049] 1) A circumferential arrangement of guys can be used to connect the strut ends forming the “end-planes” of the HYPERBOLOID and the HY-PAR SGS's as well as the faces of the polygons formed by the strut ends of the PLANAR, RADIAL and POLYGONAL SGS's as shown in the figures. A circumferential arrangement of guys can be seen in FIGS. 5A, 5B, 6A and 6B.

[0050] 2) A radial arrangement of guys can be used to connect the strut ends forming the “end-planes” of the HYPERBOLOID and the HY-PAR SGS's as well as the faces of the polygons formed by the strut ends of the PLANAR, RADIAL and POLYGONAL SGS's as shown in the figures. A radial arrangement of guys can be seen in the “end-planes” of FIGS. 2A, 2C, 2D, 4A, in eight of the twenty faces of the icosahedron of FIG. 3A (only eight faces are required to be radially guyed for structural integrity), and in four of the eight faces of the octahedron of FIG. 6C ( only four of the eight faces are required to be radially guyed for structural integrity).

[0051] 3) An internal arrangement ( internal means internal to the faces of the polygons defined by the points of attachment of the guys to the outer strut ends) of guys can be used to connect the strut ends forming the “end-planes” in combination with the vertical guys of the HYPERBOLOID and the “end-plane” guys of the HY-PAR SGS's as well as the faces of the polygons formed by the strut ends of the PLANAR, RADIAL and POLYGONAL SGS's as shown in the figures. FIGS. 2B and 3B illustrate this internal arrangement of guys.

[0052] SELF-GUYED STRUCTURES (SGS's) can be utilized as stand-alone modules or modules can be combined by connecting them at any point on a strut or guy in a nested (overlapping) or an adjacently attached configuration to assemble composite SGS's. Parts of one SGS can be combined with parts of another (e.g. one plane of the 3 discontinuous strut PLANAR with two planes of the HY-PAR as well as many other combinations). These SGS's can also be combined with traditional structures. In these combinations it is sometimes possible to have a strut and/or a guy that is common to one or more of the combined structures thus allowing the elimination of the extra member(s) and thereby economizing on the total number of separate structural members.

[0053] These SGS's structures can be made collapsible by a suitable means of disconnecting guys from struts and/or elongating selected guys or shortening selected struts. The degree of pre-stress used to construct each SGS's can be varied to achieve certain design goals.

[0054] While the above description contains many specificities, these should not be construed as limitations on the scope of the invention, but rather as an exemplification of one of the variations of the embodiments thereof. Many other variations of each embodiment of the invention are possible. Accordingly the scope of the invention should be determined not by the variations illustrated, but by the appended claims and their legal equivalents. 

I claim:
 1. HYPERBALOID three dimensional free standing static structures consisting of four or more discontinuous compression members or struts arranged to form elements of the surface of a hyperboloid of revolution of one sheet and with tension members or guys arranged in a circumferential, a radial or an internal configuration connecting the strut ends of each “end-plane” and in combination with the vertical guys in an internal configuration or on the surface of a separate hyperboloid of revolution of one sheet.
 2. HYPERBOLOID structures combined with other complete or partial structures as in claims 1,3,4,6,7,9 and 11 or combined with other traditional structures in a nested (overlapping) or adjacent configuration wherein the struts or guys may or may not intersect and common elements may or may not be eliminated from the structure for economy reasons.
 3. HYPERBOLOID three dimensional free standing static structures consisting of three discontinuous compression members or struts arranged to form elements of the surface of a hyperboloid of revolution of one sheet and with tension members or guys arranged in a circumferential, a radial or an internal configuration connecting the strut ends of each “end-plane” and in combination with the vertical guys in an internal configuration or on the surface of a separate hyperboloid of revolution of one sheet.
 4. PLANAR three dimensional free standing static structures consisting of three and six compression members or struts arranged to form elements of the surfaces of three intersecting planes which may or may not be orthogonal and where the struts in each plane may or may not be parallel and with tension members or guys arranged in a radial, a linear or an internal configuration connecting the strut ends defining the polygonal faces of these structures.
 5. PLANAR structures combined with other complete or partial structures as in claims 1,3,4,6,7,9 and 11 or combined with traditional structures in a nested (overlapping) or adjacent configuration wherein the struts or guys may or may not intersect and common elements may or may not be eliminated from the structure for economy reasons.
 6. PLANAR three dimensional free standing static structures consisting of four, five and seven or more compression members or struts arranged to form elements of the surface of a minimum of three intersecting planes which may or may not be orthogonal and where the struts in each plane may or may not be parallel and may or may not intersect each other at an internal or a peripheral point and with tension members or guys arranged in a circumferential, a radial, a linear or an internal configuration connecting the strut ends defining the polygonal faces of these structures.
 7. HY-PAR three dimensional free standing static structures consisting of four or more discontinuous compression members or struts arranged to form a minimum of two hyperbolic paraboloid surfaces which may or may not be orthogonal and with a minimum of two struts in each surface with tension members or guys arranged in a circumferential, a radial, a linear or an internal configuration connecting the strut ends defining the “send-planes” and with linear guys between ends of struts not on the edges of the hyperbolic paraboloid surfaces.
 8. HY-PAR structures combined with other complete or partial structures as in claims 1,3,4,6,7,9 and 11 or combined with traditional structures in a nested (overlapping) or adjacent configuration wherein the struts or guys may or may not intersect and common elements may or may not be eliminated from the structure for economy reasons.
 9. RADIAL three dimensional free standing static structures consisting of four or more compression members or struts arranged to form elements radiating from an internal central point which is not necessarily the exact center point and with tension members or guys arranged in a circumferential, a linear, a radial or an internal configuration connecting the outer strut ends defining the polygonal faces of these structure.
 10. RADIAL structures combined with other complete or partial structures as in claims 1,3,4,6,7,9 and 11 or combined with traditional structures in a nested (overlapping) or adjacent configuration wherein the struts or guys may or may not intersect and common elements may or may not be eliminated from the structure for economy reasons.
 11. POLYGONAL three dimensional free standing static structures consisting of four or more compression members or struts arranged in a generally radial manner with the outer ends of these struts connected by guys that are in a circumferential, a radial, a linear or an inward configuration such that an inward force is applied to the struts and with the inner strut ends connected by guys that are in a circumferential, a radial, a linear or an inner configuration such that an outward force is applied to the struts balancing the aforementioned inward force and resulting in structural integrity of these structures.
 12. POLYGONAL structures combined with other complete or partial structures as in claims 1,3,4,6,7,9 and 11 or combined with traditional structures in a nested (overlapping) or adjacent configuration wherein the struts or guys may or may not intersect and common elements may or may not be eliminated from the structure for economy reasons.
 13. Three dimensional free standing static structures as in claims 1 through 12 that are collapsible by means of disconnecting guys from struts or by means of elongating selected guys or shortening selected struts.
 14. Three dimensional free standing structures as in claims 1 through 12 that utilize various amounts of pre-stress to achieve design goals. 